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  2. Norse funeral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse_funeral

    A prominent tradition is that of the ship burial, where the deceased was laid in a boat, or a stone ship, and given grave offerings in accordance with his earthly status and profession, sometimes including sacrificed slaves. Afterwards, piles of stone and soil were usually laid on top of the remains in order to create a barrow.

  3. Death in Norse paganism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_in_Norse_paganism

    This image is usually interpreted as a Valkyrie who welcomes a dead man, or Odin himself, on the Tjängvide image stone from Gotland, in the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities in Stockholm. Death in Norse paganism was associated with diverse customs and beliefs that varied with time, location and social group, and did not form a structured ...

  4. Old Norse religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse_religion

    A passage in Snorri Sturluson's Ynglinga Saga states that Odin—whom he presents as a human king later mistaken for a deity—instituted laws that the dead would be burned on a pyre with their possessions, and burial mounds or memorial stones erected for the most notable men.

  5. Odin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odin

    Odin, in his guise as a wanderer, as imagined by Georg von Rosen (1886). Odin (/ ˈ oʊ d ɪ n /; [1] from Old Norse: Óðinn) is a widely revered god in Germanic paganism. Norse mythology, the source of most surviving information about him, associates him with wisdom, healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, war, battle, victory, sorcery, poetry, frenzy, and the runic alphabet, and ...

  6. Valknut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valknut

    Hilda Ellis Davidson theorizes a connection between the valknut, the god Odin, and "mental binds": For instance, beside the figure of Odin on his horse shown on several memorial stones there is a kind of knot depicted, called the valknut, related to the triskele. This is thought to symbolize the power of the god to bind and unbind, mentioned in ...

  7. Runestone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runestone

    The Manx illustration shows Odin with a spear and with one of his ravens on his shoulders, and Odin is attacked in the same way as he is on the Ledberg stone. Adding to the stone's spiritual content is a magic formula that was known all across the world of the pagan Norsemen.

  8. List of mortuary customs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mortuary_customs

    Cremation is a method of final disposition of a dead body through burning. [8] Cryonics low-temperature freezing (usually at −196 °C or −320.8 °F or 77.1 K) and storage of a human corpse or severed head, with the speculative hope that resurrection may be possible in the future. [9]

  9. Tängelgårda stones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tängelgårda_stones

    The upper four panels have been related to the cult of Odin; they include a battle scene with birds of prey in the top panel, [9] a horse in the third panel with additional legs or other structures under it (possibly Odin's eight-legged horse, Sleipnir), [10] and two valknuts in the fourth panel. The procession of men with downward-pointed ...